Better tourists on marijuana - whch does not, by the way, induce people to violence and stuff like that - then no tourists.You want stoned tourists??
More tourists - more money for Israel - more jobs - more guns and missiles for the IDF.
Better tourists on marijuana - whch does not, by the way, induce people to violence and stuff like that - then no tourists.You want stoned tourists??
More tourists - more money for Israel - more jobs - more guns and missiles for the IDF.
Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
That's probably a specious argument. For one, gun laws in the US are very uneven. And in the places where violent crime has dropped the most, like New York City, gun laws are the most restrictive in the country. On the other hand cities have switched to a policing intensive model which effectively dumps all available resources into massively expanding their own police departments. Moreso since 911. Where I live the average salary of police officers has doubled and the size of the force has doubled as well since 1999 yet the total population has increased from 245k to 345k. We also have 4 additional overlapping law enforcement agencies for the same area. In North Carolina basically there are 3 kinds of people. Cops, inmates and people who haven't been arrested yet.
Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
Well we can probably agree that some level of decriminalization is in order. In the US about 2 million people are behind bars for non violent drug felonies under mandatory sentencing guidelines. It represents roughly 70% of the total prison population. In the past 20 years the concept of parole has evaporated and been replaced with minimum incarceration which is usually something around 6/7ths of the given sentence. Today in the US about 1 in 10 people has first or second hand contact with the criminal justice system either through arrest, bail, conviction, incarceration, probation, community service or court mandated intervention programs. That number is expected to climb to one in four in the next 2 decades.
The point I'm trying to merely make is this: There is no conclusive proof that restrictive societies are safer.
And there's absolutely no proof that rifles and longarms are the culprit in US violent crime. They are in fact the tool for less murders in the US then knives, which is easy to check.
No that's probably true. Not too many people commit crimes with deer guns. At least in the west. In Africa though, AK's are cheaper than whiskey so just about everyone has one.
How is legalizing casinos reduce crime? and don't tell me "because gambling will be legal". You can legalize theft and get incredible decrease in crime rate.Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
What criminal act will be reduced by legal casinos?
improved economy is not a virtue by itself. on that basis, we can consider legalizing prostitution and perhaps selling of drugs?
How come? Who runs the casinos at Vegas today?Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
I know who runs the casino at Melbourne and Sidney in Australia. It is a crime family.
Another myth. The freed police resources will be allocated to addicted gamblers turned buglers, drug dealers...Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
What's so special about religious services? Why not apply the same rule to schools? hospitals? prison houses? how about infrastructure? you want to pave a new road? get donation...Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
"random jury" is also less knowledgeable about the law, more open to emotional manipulation by the attorneys and downright more stupid than the average judge. and "random jury" posses inherent biases in the form of stereotypes and prejudice as much as the next guy. regarding "conviction standard in a jury is hard", you seem to forget the power of group pressure.Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
Generally speaking - it is better to let professionals do their job.
Once again, the profit gains of legal marijuana will most probably be Channeled to the increased medical expenses.Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
Perhaps airguns are not a problem. firearms based on live ammunition are.Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
Where did you get that?Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
From what I have heard, there are neighborhoods and places in American cities that you "just don't go there" if you value your life. I cannot think of any neighborhood, or any other single place in Israel, that I would be afraid to go to. not south Tel Aviv, not Lod, not Ramla, not Givat Shmuel. anywhere.
and the trend is to reduce them gradually. like I said.Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
http://www.fbi.gov/filelink.html?fil.../00tbl2-10.xls
According to this here FBI text, there has been 6,686 peole killed with handguns in the United States in the year 2000.
396 people were killed with rifles, 468 with shotguns.
1,743 with knives, and 900 people with someone's bare hands. Interestingly, there are 77 million hanguns in the United States, and 146 million longarms.
Clearly, then, rifles are not a factor.
Why so? Can you tell me of one medical problem caused by marijuana that is somehow worse then tobacco?Once again, the profit gains of legal marijuana will most probably be Channeled to the increased medical expenses.
In fact, marijuana is safer to use then tobacco when you do not smoke it.
It is a fact - statistically proven- that juries are more likely to acquit then the judges presiding over them.regarding "conviction standard in a jury is hard", you seem to forget the power of group pressure.
Police.gov.ilWhere did you get that?
Can you please tell me, for what conceivable reason should the government subsidise the religious beliefs of certain people but not others? Why not LaVeyan satanism? Seventh Day adventism? Christianity?What's so special about religious services?
I understand - there's basic humanitarian reasons - why we subsidize hospitals and schools.
But - and this is a general fact- nowhere in the Western world does a system of money-to-the-religious - exist. There's no reason it should, either.
It's as slow as to be unnoticeable - and I personally believe it is too slow.and the trend is to reduce them gradually. like I said.
Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
In the last several years I've never met a pot smoker who could stop or even moderate their intake. It seems to come down to smoke as much as you can get your hands on and often as you can. Now maybe that's not a criminal problem but it's not neutral. There are consequences to unbridled pot smoking. So one could I think make a case for restricted decriminalization. But people who want to get it will easily get whether its legal or not.
BTW you have zero reliable statistics for the long term use of heavy pot smoking for long periods of time over a broad population. You can never get a reliable sample size or truthful answers.
I don's see how many of your suggestions are actually libertarian though. Maybe they're just more oriented toward an American way of doing things and not really libertarian in the sense we mean it.
Also what do you mean by jury trials? What portion of your arrests actually end up in court? For us it's maybe 5-10%. It's very expensive to go to trial and the outcomes are a crapshoot for everyone. A lot of defendants do not prefer jury trials.
Smoking - wihch is unhealthy REGARDLESS of what you smoke - is not really the only way to consume pot, and the other ones are IMHO more safe.
Mediocrates: They are simply moderately libertarian rather then the stupid OMG CAPITAL-ANARCHISM NOW way preached by guys like Neil Smith
I wouldn't like my sister, pushing a baby cart, being harrassed by foreign pot heads. Nor would other people as well.Originally Posted by MicroBalrog
I would consider, however, free heroin, to already declared addicts, being administared for free, in special goverment liecensed clinics. I am considering brand new "party drugs" with approved and regulated ingredients in standardizes concentration made by large corporation such as TEVA.
Pot per se, is a dangerous brain rotting drug. Worse then many others, because of its sheap skin in public opinion.
Gilgamesh, I agree with you. Totally!
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